John Henry Twachtman Catalogue Raisonné
An online catalogue by Lisa N. Peters, Ph.D., in collaboration with the Greenwich Historical Society
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Keywords
E.602
Dutch Seascape
ca. 1881–85
Etching on paper
3 3/4 x 5 1/8 in. (9.5 x 13 cm)
Signed verso, lower left: no. 5 Twachtman
Provenance
Literature
Baskett, Mary Welsh. John Henry Twachtman: American Impressionist Painter as Printmaker—A Catalogue Raisonné of His Prints. Bronxville, N.Y.: M. Hausberg, 1999, pp. 84–85, ill. in b/w, as Dutch Seascape. (Baskett concordance).
Commentary

As indicated by Mary Baskett, only two known impressions of this etching have been located (Brigham Young University and private collection). She states: "More than half of this composition is taken up by water in the foreground. The flat plane of water and high horizon give the print a two-dimensional quality and also imply that the artist was in a boat as he drew the scene. The small size of the plate supports the possibility that Twachtman sketched the subject on the spot."

The work is closely related to a painting: Harbor Scene with Reflection (OP.608). In both images, Twachtman depicted a view looking south toward Dordrecht at the confluence of three rivers, the Merwede, the Oude Maas, and the Noord. The two images feature the same two boats anchored together with a sailboat on the water at the right. However, the scenes are different. In the small etching, with proportions closer to a square, the two boats appear less distant from the shore, where the Groothoofdspoort, Dordrecht's town gate, blends with other architectural structures. Twachtman included a sailboat at the left in the painting that he omitted here, while a second sailboat on the water is the same boat in the painting, but here it is to the left of the distant windmill, whereas it is to the right of the windmill in the painting. 

The presence of the Groothoofdspoort verifies Ryerson's title for the etching of Dordrecht in 1920 (Ryerson 1920). 

The impression of this etching in the collection Brigham Young University Museum of Art, illustrated here, is a lifetime print.